No.
All lines of latitude meet at the South Pole -- and the North Pole. For example, the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees meets the International Date Lilne -- 180 degrees, at the poles.
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.
Well, not exactly. Technically, all meridians of longitude run between the north andsouth poles, so their ends are at the poles, and they don't pass through. But you'recorrect in your description that if you follow any line of longitude south, eventuallyyou wind up at the south pole, because they all meet there.
The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
The Prime Meridian ends at both the North Pole and South Pole.
-- Every meridian of longitude crosses the equator, and every other parallel of latitude. -- Every meridian of longitude has one end at the north pole. -- Every meridian of longitude has the other end at the south pole. The meridians don't 'pass through' the poles, because every one of them stops there.
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.
All lines of latitude meet at the South Pole -- and the North Pole, and what they meet is their 180-degree opposite. For example, the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees meets the International Date Line -- 180 degrees at both poles.
The south pole is nearly dead center of the continent of Antarctica.
Both poles are on both of those lines, but to be very technical about it,those lines don't "pass through" either pole.The poles are the end-points of both the Prime Meridian and the InternationalDate Line. So when either line reaches the pole, it stops there, and it doesn'tpass through.
The 30-degree line of longitude passes through North America, Africa, and Australia.
Well, not exactly. Technically, all meridians of longitude run between the north andsouth poles, so their ends are at the poles, and they don't pass through. But you'recorrect in your description that if you follow any line of longitude south, eventuallyyou wind up at the south pole, because they all meet there.
both. it runs up to both ex. north---------------------------------------------south
the equator
All Meridian lines pass from the North to South pole. The Prime Meridian specifically is 0 degrees longitude line and passes through Greenwich. England just outside of downtown London.
Yes. It runs from the North Pole to the South Pole.
The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.